IBM SC30-3865-04 Network Router User Manual


 
area...
filter...
prefix-address
receive-password
routing-circuit...
template...
alias Adds an ASCII string that designates a particular area address or system
ID. The ASCII string can be
a-z, A-Z, 0-–9
, a few other characters including
the hyphen ( - ), comma ( , ), and underscore ( _ ). Do not use escape
characters.
The offset indicates the position, in semi-octets (nibbles), where the ASCII
string begins within the address (aliases used for system IDs have an offset
of 1). The string must be the same size or longer than the segment it is
designating or you will receive an invalid segment length message. The
maximum allowable alias is 20 bytes.
Note: When using an alias input, you must surround it with brackets. For
example: l1_update 47[
newname
]99999000012341234.
Example:
add alias
Alias [ ]:
Segment [ ]:
Offset [1]:
Alias The character string you want to use
Segment
The NSAP segment that the alias is replacing
Offset The location of the alias (in 4-bit, semi-octets) within the NSAP. The
offset is determined from the beginning (left) of the NSAP as it is
displayed on the terminal.
area
area-addr
Adds additional area addresses (18-byte maximum) that the node supports.
An L1 node that supports other areas considers those synonymous areas.
One area address is the area portion of the configured NET. If you try to
add a duplicate area address, the router will display an error message.
Example:
add area 47000580999999000012341234
Note: When adding synonymous areas to an L1 node, use the set globals
command to configure the maximum number synonymous areas
allowed for this node. All routers within an area must use the same
maximum number of synonymous areas. Adjacencies can not be
established if they are different.
filter
filter-name routing-circuit-name calling-DTE call-UserData priority
Adds parameters upon which the router bases its acceptance of incoming
X.25 calls on an routing circuit, either a static incoming or dynamically
assigned (DA) circuit.
The
filter-name
is the name you give the filter. The
routing-circuit-name
is
the name of the routing circuit with which the filter is associated.
DECnet V/OSI Configuration Commands (Talk 6)
306
MRS V3.2 Protocol Config Ref Vol 2